At six years old, Jeah Desabille Ancero did not bargain for toys, candy, or playtime. She bargained for a classroom.
Hailing from Libtong—an upland barangay in the capital of Biliran—Jeah’s journey began with a fight for survival that few could imagine. Diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL), her world had shrunk to the sterile confinement of a hospital room in Cebu. When her doctor forbade her from enrolling in school to focus on chemotherapy, telling her, "Jeah, school can wait," the frail six-year-old fired back with a wisdom born of desperation.
"Doc, school might wait, but my age won't run with it. What if I die without ever seeing the inside of a classroom?"
That desperate plea—the terror of dying without ever experiencing a normal childhood—fueled a grueling 17-year odyssey. It was a journey that led her to the graduation stage in May 2025 as a Cum Laude, and finally, to the roll of passers in the September 2025 Licensure Examination for Teachers (LET).
The Weaver’s Knot: A Family’s Sacrifice
Jeah’s victory was not woven by a single thread. She recalls the agony of isolation in Cebu, living in boarding houses and hospital wards, separated from her father and siblings in Biliran.
"People didn't know our story," Jeah recalls. She watched her mother swallow her dignity, going from police stations to TV stations, begging for blood donors and financial aid. Her mother was sometimes mistaken for a scammer, yet she never stopped walking, never stopped asking. Meanwhile, in Biliran, her father sold their land and pawned their possessions—almost losing their home—just to send money every other day.
"I felt like I wasn't my parents' child anymore because of the amount of stranger's blood transfused in me," Jeah admits, recalling the physical torture of spinal injections, a misdiagnosed appendix surgery, and days of endless vomiting.
Overcoming the Stigma
When Jeah finally returned to school at age 11, entering Grade 1, the battle shifted from physical to emotional. Wearing a wig and double masks to protect her compromised immune system, she became a target for bullies.
"They said I was contagious," she remembers. "There were times I wanted to quit."
But Jeah persisted. She passed the Alternative Learning System (ALS) exams to jump from Grade 4 to Grade 7, refusing to let the lost years define her future.
The Hustle of a Solo Mother-Student
In her Senior High School, life threw another curveball: Jeah became a single mother. Battling postpartum depression and the trauma of a C-section, she transformed into a working student with an unbreakable resolve.
To spare her parents further financial burden, Jeah became a master of the hustle. She sold goods, delivered suman, taught dance, and worked as a nail and makeup artist late into the night.
"I went to school in the morning, worked at night, went home on Saturdays to be a mom, and worked Sundays for my Monday allowance," she shares. "Behind the smiles on social media was a woman crying every night, battling pressure and exhaustion."
A Testament to the BiPSU Spirit
In May 2025, Jeah marched as a victorious Cum Laude graduate of the Bachelor in Special Needs Education program at Biliran Province State University (BiPSU). And she didn't stop there. Just months later, she conquered the September 2025 Board Licensure Examination for Teachers, officially becoming a Licensed Professional Teacher.
It is poetic that Jeah chose Special Needs Education. Having known what it is to be judged for being different, to be excluded, and to be physically vulnerable, she has now earned the license to serve children who face their own unique battles.
Her journey is a definitive reflection of a victorious BiPSU- an institution that does not just produce academic achievers, but weaves worthiness into students who possess the grit to overcome insurmountable odds.
A Message of Gratitude and Hope
Now standing on the other side of the struggle, Jeah shares a powerful message for those who walked with her, including a special note of gratitude to the university leadership:
"To our University President, Dr. Victor C. Cañezo, Jr., thank you for leading an institution that opens its doors to dreamers like me. Thank you for fostering a BiPSU that values not just our grades, but our stories and our survival. Your vision for a 'Victorious BiPSU' gave me a home where I felt I could finally win."
"To the students who are struggling right now: If life feels heavy and unfair, please know this—your situation today is not your final destination. I was once delayed, doubted, and almost defeated, but I learned that progress is still progress, even when it’s slow. Don’t compare your timeline to others. As long as you keep going, God has purpose. Life may delay you, break you, and test you but it will never defeat you if you refuse to give up."
She also extends her deepest gratitude to those who served as her pillars:
"To my teachers from elementary to college: Thank you for seeing the potential in me even when I was unsure of myself. You did not only teach lessons from books, but lessons about patience, compassion, and believing in one’s worth. You molded me not just into a graduate, but into a future teacher."
"To my friends: Thank you for staying, for understanding my silence, for cheering me on in moments I almost gave up. Your presence reminded me that I was never alone in this fight."
"This victory is not mine alone; it belongs to everyone who believed, prayed, helped, and walked with me through the hardest seasons of my life. God did not save me just to survive—He saved me so I could testify."
From a hospital bed where she begged for a chance to learn, to the professional world where she now stands ready to teach, Jeah has proven that the will to live is the strongest medicine of all.
#WoWBiPSU #WoWBiPSUnista
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